Question: Snus, prepared from ground tobacco leaves, is a form of snuff that's usually tucked inside the cheek, where its nicotine payload can be slowly absorbed across the mucous membranes of the mouth. Snuff is generally regarded as harmful—in South Asia, for example, it's associated with a higher risk for mouth cancer. Is snus lower risk?

New research: That is the question examined in this recent Lancet paper. The researchers followed more than 125,000 Swedish construction workers, for 12 to 26 years, who were nonsmoking users of snus. They found no increase in oral or lung cancers, compared with nonsmokers who did not use any form of tobacco. But they did find an approximately double risk of developing pancreatic cancer, resulting in about 40 more cases of this disease in the 125,000 snus users. Other studies of snus users in Sweden show only tiny increases in heart disease and stroke, two conditions that are significantly higher in cigarette smokers. It would appear, then, that snus—though not risk-free—is safer than smoking.

Implications: Another Lancet paper examined whether introducing snus in Australia (where snuff is illegal, but cigarette smoking is not) would lead to an increase in tobacco use. The authors come out pro-snus: They argue that if snus were made legal, between 14 and 25 nonsmokers would have to start using to offset the gain in average life expectancy from every one smoker who quit and switched to snus.

Conclusion: Currently, more than 5 million people a year die worldwide as a result of tobacco use—in most developed countries, it's the cause of about one out of five deaths. The chronic illnesses associated with it are also terrible. So, these papers on snus put public-health people in a quandary. Should we promote a less hazardous tobacco product? If the goal is to reduce the harm done by tobacco, snus seems a pretty good choice. And yet I find it very hard to get the words out of my mouth. Which leaves me with a troubling question: Are doctors like me—blocked by prejudices from making rational choices—contributing to the harms caused by smoking? I'd better reform my ways.

Question: When we think of the effects of severe malnutrition, we usually think of weakness, stunted growth, and perhaps apathy and a diminished ability to learn. It's less well-known that nutritional deprivation—in particular, protein- and calorie-deficiency—have another pervasive and insidious effect: a diminished immune response that increases susceptibility to infectious disease. Why, exactly, does malnutrition cause a poor immune response?

New research: A recent paper provides some answers. Mounting a strong immune defense requires the body to generate an increased number of the white blood cells that engulf and destroy invading organisms, by jump-starting the production of antibodies—proteins that bind to and inactivate bacteria and viruses. Making new cells and synthesizing proteins require energy that seriously malnourished people simply do not have to spare. Without these defensive cells and antibody molecules, they are less able to control infections once they've started. Also, people whose protein intake is deficient don't have an adequate source of amino acids, including the amino acid arginine, which has special importance for good immune function because of the role it plays in controlling the release of cytokines, chemicals involved in immune defense.

Also: Other food ingredients, like vitamin A and zinc, additionally help enhance response to disease. Finally, the growth of certain bacteria is inhibited by the ingredients in a replete diet. For example, the folklore that undernourished people are at greater risk for developing tuberculosis is true. Animal studies going back more than 50 years suggested this, and recent human research has shown that a cholesterol-rich diet significantly improves the rate at which TB patients respond to treatment.

Conclusion: What does all this mean? Further research is surely needed, but it may well be that we can achieve better medical results for large numbers of people in developing countries by focusing on nutritional and public-health interventions, rather than fancy new medications.

Problem: Depending on how you measure it (and the age of the people you survey), somewhere between 8 percent and 40 percent of American women suffer from urinary stress incontinence—the leakage of urine with physical exertion, sneezing, or coughing. The problem is more likely to occur as women age and after they have delivered babies.

Standard treatments: The famous Kegel exercises are usually tried first, but they don't work well for many patients. Women often go on to more invasive treatments like surgery or the injection of bulking agents to plump up the tissues around the neck of the bladder and help keep the urethral valve tightly closed. There is evidence that the surgery helps, but sometimes at the cost of side effects like a higher rate of urinary tract infections or the development of other complications, like leakage associated with the urge to urinate. In addition, as time passes the stress incontinence may return.

New research: A recent paper describes an entirely new approach to this problem, with impressive results. The researchers argue that the main cause of stress incontinence is a weakening of the muscle layer that almost surrounds the urethra below the bladder. (This weakening is the result of injury—often associated with childbirth—and a gradual dwindling of muscle cells as patients age.) As patients get older, the supportive tissue layer just below the lining of the urethra also thins and weakens.

Method: The study authors treated stress incontinence by strengthening the failing muscle layer and thickening and restoring the layer of tissue just underneath the lining of the urethra. They did this by collecting a small amount (about one-tenth of a teaspoon in volume) of muscle tissue through a small incision in the patient's upper arm. These tissues were cultivated in a laboratory for almost two months to develop a stock of muscle stem cells and fibroblast support cells. Then, they were passed up through the urethra to the proper level just below the bladder and injected in multiple tiny amounts through the urethral lining.

Findings: Forty-two women were randomly assigned to receive this treatment, and their results were compared with a control group of 21 women who were given a conventional treatment for stress incontinence: the injection of collagen, a bulking agent, into the tissues surrounding the urethra. There were no complications in either group. A year after the procedures, 90 percent of the women who received the cell treatment were cured of incontinence, compared with only 10 percent of the women treated with the bulking agent. (Of the four patients in the cell-treated group who were not completely recovered, three showed substantial improvement. In contrast, among the women given conventional treatment, besides the two successes, almost none of the remainder showed any improvement.) After three years, the results were unchanged. As you might expect, the quality of life was a lot better for the successfully treated women.

Conclusion: The treatment I've described is in a very early stage of development, but it's exciting and promising. I am particularly taken with it given what we know about the mechanism of incontinence, and as an example of a well-thought-out application of a hot new method, the use of adult-derived stem cells.

Sydney Spiesel is a pediatrician in Woodbridge, Conn., and clinical professor of pediatrics at Yale University's School of Medicine.

March 3 2015 1:39 PMThe “Most Pleasurable Portrayal of Libertarianism“ Bonus SegmentDavid, Emily, and John discuss what Parks and Recreation got right about government.Emily Bazelon, David Plotz, and John Dickerson